Nike Oregon Project coach Alberto Salazar issued a statement Wednesday night denying allegations made in a 2016 report prepared by the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency in response to a subpoena from the Texas Medical Board.

Salazar called the allegations "incorrect," and said he had submitted documentation to the USADA.

In the statement emailed to The Oregonian/OregonLive, Salazar wrote he has cooperated with USADA investigators and voluntarily answered questions under oath.

Reached by phone, Salazar confirmed he prepared and sent the email. He declined further comment.

The USADA previously has acknowledged it is investigating Salazar's Oregon Project, a Portland-based training group, and Jeffrey Brown, a Houston endocrinologist. Brown has worked with the Oregon Project and been Salazar's physician.

Parts of the confidential report were quoted in stories in February by the Sunday Times of London and by The New York Times last week. The track & field website FloTrack put up a link to what appears to be a version of the entire 269-page report on Tuesday, except for what it said were two minor redactions.

The report alleges Salazar and Brown used medications in ways they weren't intended, and engaged in subterfuge to conceal what they were doing. It buttresses the allegations with emails, interviews and medical records.

It alleges Salazar had two concurrent prescriptions from different physicians for the drug testosterone. Salazar has said he uses testosterone for a personal medical problem. It would be considered a performance-enhancing drug if used by athletes without a therapeutic use exemption.

Here is Salazar's response:

"As I have noted repeatedly, the successes my athletes have achieved are through hard work and dedication. I believe in a clean sport and a methodical, dedicated, approach to training. The Oregon Project will never permit doping and all Oregon Project athletes are required to comply with the WADA (World Anti-Doping Agency) Code and IAAF (International Association of Athletics Federations, the governing body of international track and field) Rules.

"To be clear, I never used testosterone when I was competing, I have never had 'dual' testosterone prescriptions, and I have never rubbed testosterone on an athlete. The baseless speculation by USADA to the contrary is simply wrong.

"Likewise, USADA's conjecture regarding the L-carnitine injections is simply wrong. Evidence has been submitted to USADA disproving their unsupported assumptions --evidence USADA should have collected before issuing its incorrect suppositions to the TMB as fact.

"I've done more than any coach to continuously disprove false allegations where no violation has occurred. I fully cooperated, voluntarily answered USADA's questions under oath and provided thousands of documents.

"Lastly, the Oregon Project and its athletes have nothing to hide and are hiding nothing. I fully support their exercising of their rights under the WADA Code and IAAF rules to protect themselves from these improper intrusions. I find it particularly disturbing that athletes' personal medical records are being aired publicly. There is no excuse for it. USADA has failed these innocent athletes."